Are There Any Male Writers Of Romance Novels?

2026-03-29 22:05:44 301

4 Answers

Aiden
Aiden
2026-03-31 07:12:32
Totally! I used to think romance was all women writers until I stumbled upon Alexis Hall's 'Boyfriend Material'—turns out he's a dude writing hilarious, swoon-worthy gay rom-coms. Then there's Casey McQuiston (okay, non-binary, but assigned male at birth) who wrote 'Red, White & Royal Blue,' which basically revived my faith in political romances. Even in historicals, think of Georgette Heyer's contemporaries like male writers crafting regency banter. The bias is real though—some male authors use pen names to avoid stigma, which says more about readers' assumptions than the genre itself.
Kai
Kai
2026-04-01 01:57:18
Yep, and they often bring fresh angles—like John Green's 'The Fault in Our Stars' balancing romance with existential dread, or Taylor Jenkins Reid's male contemporaries writing messy, adult relationships. Even in gaming, routes written by male devs (like 'Collar x Malice's' toxic-yet-addictive romances) prove emotional depth isn't gendered. The more we normalize men consuming and creating romance, the richer the genre gets.
Victoria
Victoria
2026-04-01 04:38:47
Romance novels have this weird reputation as being a 'female-dominated' space, but that's honestly such a shallow take. Some of the most tender, emotionally raw love stories I've devoured were written by men—Nicholas Sparks is the obvious example, but have you tried Adam Silvera's 'They Both Die at the End'? It wrecked me in the best way.

Then there's TJ Klune weaving queer fantasy romance with 'The House in the Cerulean Sea,' or Fredrik Backman's 'A Man Called Ove,' which hides a love story so deep it sneaks up on you. Even classics like Erich Segal's 'Love Story' prove men can write heartache just as well. The gatekeeping around romance baffles me—good writing transcends gender, and craving emotional stories isn't gendered at all.
Marissa
Marissa
2026-04-02 02:03:21
My bookshelf would be emptier without male romance writers. Rainbow Rowell gets all the hype for 'Eleanor & Park,' but have you read David Levithan's co-authored 'Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist'? Pure teenage yearning gold. Even in anime adaptations, light novels like 'Toradora!' by male author Yuyuko Takemiya show men understand chaotic love stories.

And let's not forget fanfiction—some of the most viral romance tropes originated from male writers in spaces like Archive of Our Own. The idea that men can't write intimacy feels outdated when you see how many are quietly killing it in the genre.
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